COVER TEST
COVER TEST
TROPIA: a manifest deviation of the visual axes
occurring when stimuli to fusion is operation
(Actual name for tropia: strabismus or manifest deviation)
present even if eyes are fusing image
PHORIA: latent deviation
by eliminating all stimuli of fusion
heterophoria
Cover test
one eye at a time
Determines manifest or latent deviation
DIPLOPIA: perception of one object that projects on two diff non-corresponding retinal areas
Causes confusion and uncomfort
Problems driving
>it looks double. does not become one clear image
*diplopia only occurs if acute or acquired
VISUAL CONFUSION: 2 diff images. Overlapping
Not the same image
We see one image on top of the other
Happens when were trying to see something but there’s other things infront
Looks like one is in top of each other
Can cause with strabismus if change in angle of deviation
i.e. driving: cant identify correcelty where road is
ADULTS: strabismus may be related to neurological condition such as a brain tumor, head trauma, stroke or MG
>sudden onset: diplopia
>longlasting (present from childhood): no diplopia
suppression may have developed
Case hx key!
HPI
>when 1st present?
>trauma hx?
>eye sx
PMH
>if kid: gestational, birth and dev hx, vax status (if suspect viral)
ROS
>recent viral syndrome, fever, malaise, HA, nausea, sick?
Lethargic if they’re usual active?
Head titlts??
Wt loss
Gross defect
POH
>ocular and visual
LEE, ocular dx, refractive correction
FOH
Strabismus (un ojo que entra/sale?), refractive error
General physical: neurological findings
Ocular exam: Vas, Hirschberg, cover test, EOMs, Bruckner and pupillary responses
STRABISMUS EVAL
Hx
Onset
Present at all time or sometimes
Distance or near
OU? Favor one eye?
>uni
Intermentally: when tired? Unattentive?
Same when not doing near work?
Trauma
Physical stress
HA??
Vertigo
CLASSIFICATION OF DEVIATION
Only tropias classified in this matter
Unilateral or alternating
uni: only one eye!
Alt: manifested in either eye even if it prefers one eye
Some pts can fix it! You tell them to look straight and they will
Constant or intermittent
Constant: all the timeeee
Intermittent: sometimes
Comitancy
Size of angle of deviation in
Concomitant: all position gazes within 5PD
Incomitant: difference > 5PD
i.e Primary: 10 PD
Up: 20PD
Down: 2 prism D
Periodic tropia: only at only one testing distance
i.e. either near OR far
just one, not both
Paralytic tropia: due to the paralysis
CN 3
CN4
CN 6
Example of incomitance:
A patient might be a 5PD Esotrope in primary gaze (ask them what primary gaze is) but when they look up, the deviation increases to 15PD Esotropia. This is incomitant,, the difference is larger than 5PD.
DIRECTION OF DEVIATION
Ortho: no mvnt. Perfect alignment
Lateral/horizontal
Exo (tropia or phoria): outward deviation
>measure with BI prism
Eso (tropia or phoria): inward deviation
>measure with BO prism
Wherever eye moves in cover test
I.e. moves out = eso
Use base out
Vertical
Always one moves up- other moves down!
Always report the HYPER eye
Upward deviation: hyper
>Measure with BD prism
Downward deviation: hypo
>measure with BU prism
*will see seesaw mvnt
Combined:
Later and vertical mvnt
Cyclodeviatin: torsional deviations
TROPIA VS PHORIA
Tropia: manifest deviation when stimuli to fusion is operating
Heterotropia, strabismus
Exotropia (XT): one eye deviates outward
Esotropia (ET): one eye deviates inward
Hypertropia: one eye deviates upward
Hypotropia: one eye deviates downward
Phoria: latent deviation brought by eliminating all stimuli to fusion
IDENTIFIED BY: direction and magnitude and testing distance
>NOT MEASURED SEPARATELY
-so only have to measure one
COVER TEST
Provides an objective magnitude of the deviation
Deviation may be:
Latent (phorias):
Manifest (strabismums -tropia):
Cover test
Unilateral: one eye at the time
No mvnt: ortho
Mvnt: Strabismums
Alternate: switch between the two
Phoric dev (heterophoria)
If mvnt: direction + magnitude
No mvnt: ortho
MUST EVALUATE:
1. Presence or absence of deviation
2. Direction of dev
a. horizontal
b. vertical
c. torsional
3. magnitude of deviation
>full room illumination
TARGET: one line above best VA of worse eye with habitual SRx
@ 40cm
@ eye level but do not obstruct line of sight
UCT
any deviation of uncovered eye indicates presence of tropia
Pt has to be fixated well at distance
Moves out: exo
BI
Cover an uncover for 2-3 times
Leave it on there for 1-2 secs!
>ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS TO ASK
is it moving?
with or against the paddle?
ACT
-Determine phoria or latent dev
Magnitude and direction of dev
Cover OD -> switch over nose to OS
>observe the eye that you just uncovered
>sometimes may need to remind them to blink otherwise it may not be presenting properly
DIRECTION AND MAGNITUDE
Which eye? Direction? (exo, eso, hyper)
Phorias: NO LATERAL
Bc happen in both eyes at same time and mag
Only report direction & magnitude
PRISMS
Image shifted towards base and eye toward apex
NEUTRALIZING WITH PRIS
*always orient the prism with the apex in direction of deviation
Base in direction that eye moves
Ie Eso: place Prism base out, apex IN
Manifest: ID dominant eye
Measure non-fixating eye!
continue adding prism until you see a reversal
1st no mvnt
2nd: opposite
Add both numbers/2
i.e. dev 1st no mvnt: 10pd
2nd opp mvnt: 12pd
11
ORTHOPHORIA
1. Induce by using BASE IN prism until first mvnt
2. BO until first mvnt
3. Subtract the two and /2
If really ortho: BI & BO should be same and =0 at end
RECORDING ABBREVATIONS
XT: Exotropia
ET: Esotropia
HT: Hypertropia
Only the hyper eye is recorded
R: OD
L: OS
A: Alternating
(T): Intermittent
T: Distance
T’: Near
XP: Exophoria
EP: Esophoria
ɸ: Ortho
cc: with correction
sc: without correction
EXPECTED FINDINGS
1Δ XP ± 2Δ at distance
3Δ XP ± 3Δ at near
Presbyopes tend to have larger XP at near
-It is expected to increase in exophoria as we increase in age
-Also expected to have less convergence
HIRSCHBERG TEST
used to: identify strabismus when other precise methods can’t be used
screening tool
-any symmetry indicates: direction & magnitude of an eye turn
-30-100cm
PROCEDURE:
1. pt look at light
2. occlude OS to look at OD
3. remove with OD occluded
4. compare corneal reflex when one eye Is fixating vs when both
a. 1mm od deviation is = 22Δ
CORNEAL LIGHT REFLEX
>CLR nasal
(+) value
>CLR temporal
(-)
expected: +0.5mm CLR in both eyes
notice if the CLR is in the same position on each pupil
if not equal = pt has strabismus
KRIMSY
uses prisms to move the deviated reflex back to the expected position
measures the deviation
BRUCKNER TEST
ophthalmoscope @ 1m away
equal: binocular fixation
not equal:
darker reflex (red): fixating eye
brighter reflex (whiteish): non-fixating eye
COVER TEST
TROPIA: a manifest deviation of the visual axes
occurring when stimuli to fusion is operation
(Actual name for tropia: strabismus or manifest deviation)
present even if eyes are fusing image
PHORIA: latent deviation
by eliminating all stimuli of fusion
heterophoria
Cover test
one eye at a time
Determines manifest or latent deviation
DIPLOPIA: perception of one object that projects on two diff non-corresponding retinal areas
Causes confusion and uncomfort
Problems driving
>it looks double. does not become one clear image
*diplopia only occurs if acute or acquired
VISUAL CONFUSION: 2 diff images. Overlapping
Not the same image
We see one image on top of the other
Happens when were trying to see something but there’s other things infront
Looks like one is in top of each other
Can cause with strabismus if change in angle of deviation
i.e. driving: cant identify correcelty where road is
ADULTS: strabismus may be related to neurological condition such as a brain tumor, head trauma, stroke or MG
>sudden onset: diplopia
>longlasting (present from childhood): no diplopia
suppression may have developed
Case hx key!
HPI
>when 1st present?
>trauma hx?
>eye sx
PMH
>if kid: gestational, birth and dev hx, vax status (if suspect viral)
ROS
>recent viral syndrome, fever, malaise, HA, nausea, sick?
Lethargic if they’re usual active?
Head titlts??
Wt loss
Gross defect
POH
>ocular and visual
LEE, ocular dx, refractive correction
FOH
Strabismus (un ojo que entra/sale?), refractive error
General physical: neurological findings
Ocular exam: Vas, Hirschberg, cover test, EOMs, Bruckner and pupillary responses
STRABISMUS EVAL
Hx
Onset
Present at all time or sometimes
Distance or near
OU? Favor one eye?
>uni
Intermentally: when tired? Unattentive?
Same when not doing near work?
Trauma
Physical stress
HA??
Vertigo
CLASSIFICATION OF DEVIATION
Only tropias classified in this matter
Unilateral or alternating
uni: only one eye!
Alt: manifested in either eye even if it prefers one eye
Some pts can fix it! You tell them to look straight and they will
Constant or intermittent
Constant: all the timeeee
Intermittent: sometimes
Comitancy
Size of angle of deviation in
Concomitant: all position gazes within 5PD
Incomitant: difference > 5PD
i.e Primary: 10 PD
Up: 20PD
Down: 2 prism D
Periodic tropia: only at only one testing distance
i.e. either near OR far
just one, not both
Paralytic tropia: due to the paralysis
CN 3
CN4
CN 6
Example of incomitance:
A patient might be a 5PD Esotrope in primary gaze (ask them what primary gaze is) but when they look up, the deviation increases to 15PD Esotropia. This is incomitant,, the difference is larger than 5PD.
DIRECTION OF DEVIATION
Ortho: no mvnt. Perfect alignment
Lateral/horizontal
Exo (tropia or phoria): outward deviation
>measure with BI prism
Eso (tropia or phoria): inward deviation
>measure with BO prism
Wherever eye moves in cover test
I.e. moves out = eso
Use base out
Vertical
Always one moves up- other moves down!
Always report the HYPER eye
Upward deviation: hyper
>Measure with BD prism
Downward deviation: hypo
>measure with BU prism
*will see seesaw mvnt
Combined:
Later and vertical mvnt
Cyclodeviatin: torsional deviations
TROPIA VS PHORIA
Tropia: manifest deviation when stimuli to fusion is operating
Heterotropia, strabismus
Exotropia (XT): one eye deviates outward
Esotropia (ET): one eye deviates inward
Hypertropia: one eye deviates upward
Hypotropia: one eye deviates downward
Phoria: latent deviation brought by eliminating all stimuli to fusion
IDENTIFIED BY: direction and magnitude and testing distance
>NOT MEASURED SEPARATELY
-so only have to measure one
COVER TEST
Provides an objective magnitude of the deviation
Deviation may be:
Latent (phorias):
Manifest (strabismums -tropia):
Cover test
Unilateral: one eye at the time
No mvnt: ortho
Mvnt: Strabismums
Alternate: switch between the two
Phoric dev (heterophoria)
If mvnt: direction + magnitude
No mvnt: ortho
MUST EVALUATE:
1. Presence or absence of deviation
2. Direction of dev
a. horizontal
b. vertical
c. torsional
3. magnitude of deviation
>full room illumination
TARGET: one line above best VA of worse eye with habitual SRx
@ 40cm
@ eye level but do not obstruct line of sight
UCT
any deviation of uncovered eye indicates presence of tropia
Pt has to be fixated well at distance
Moves out: exo
BI
Cover an uncover for 2-3 times
Leave it on there for 1-2 secs!
>ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS TO ASK
is it moving?
with or against the paddle?
ACT
-Determine phoria or latent dev
Magnitude and direction of dev
Cover OD -> switch over nose to OS
>observe the eye that you just uncovered
>sometimes may need to remind them to blink otherwise it may not be presenting properly
DIRECTION AND MAGNITUDE
Which eye? Direction? (exo, eso, hyper)
Phorias: NO LATERAL
Bc happen in both eyes at same time and mag
Only report direction & magnitude
PRISMS
Image shifted towards base and eye toward apex
NEUTRALIZING WITH PRIS
*always orient the prism with the apex in direction of deviation
Base in direction that eye moves
Ie Eso: place Prism base out, apex IN
Manifest: ID dominant eye
Measure non-fixating eye!
continue adding prism until you see a reversal
1st no mvnt
2nd: opposite
Add both numbers/2
i.e. dev 1st no mvnt: 10pd
2nd opp mvnt: 12pd
11
ORTHOPHORIA
1. Induce by using BASE IN prism until first mvnt
2. BO until first mvnt
3. Subtract the two and /2
If really ortho: BI & BO should be same and =0 at end
RECORDING ABBREVATIONS
XT: Exotropia
ET: Esotropia
HT: Hypertropia
Only the hyper eye is recorded
R: OD
L: OS
A: Alternating
(T): Intermittent
T: Distance
T’: Near
XP: Exophoria
EP: Esophoria
ɸ: Ortho
cc: with correction
sc: without correction
EXPECTED FINDINGS
1Δ XP ± 2Δ at distance
3Δ XP ± 3Δ at near
Presbyopes tend to have larger XP at near
-It is expected to increase in exophoria as we increase in age
-Also expected to have less convergence
HIRSCHBERG TEST
used to: identify strabismus when other precise methods can’t be used
screening tool
-any symmetry indicates: direction & magnitude of an eye turn
-30-100cm
PROCEDURE:
1. pt look at light
2. occlude OS to look at OD
3. remove with OD occluded
4. compare corneal reflex when one eye Is fixating vs when both
a. 1mm od deviation is = 22Δ
CORNEAL LIGHT REFLEX
>CLR nasal
(+) value
>CLR temporal
(-)
expected: +0.5mm CLR in both eyes
notice if the CLR is in the same position on each pupil
if not equal = pt has strabismus
KRIMSY
uses prisms to move the deviated reflex back to the expected position
measures the deviation
BRUCKNER TEST
ophthalmoscope @ 1m away
equal: binocular fixation
not equal:
darker reflex (red): fixating eye
brighter reflex (whiteish): non-fixating eye